Repo and Securities Lending

Impact of bank rates

Learning Outcome

5

Understand the impact of RBI policies on banks and consumers.

4

Differentiate between CRR and SLR.

3

Analyze the impact on loans and EMIs.

2

Learn how RBI controls inflation and growth.

1

Understand Repo Rate, Reverse Repo Rate, CRR, and SLR.

Repo Rate

The rate at which the RBI provides short-term funds to commercial banks. It is the RBI's primary tool to steer interest rates in the economy.

Impact on Repo Rate when it goes DOWN:

  → Banks get cheaper funds from RBI

  → Banks pass on lower rates to customers

  → Loans become cheaper → More borrowing → Economy grows faster

Impact on Repo Rate when it goes UP:

  → Banks borrow at a higher cost from RBI

  → Banks raise their own lending rates (MCLR rises)

  → Loans become expensive → Borrowing slows → Inflation cools down

Real-Life Example:

  • In May 2022, RBI raised the Repo Rate from 4.00% to 4.40%.

  • Major banks increased home loan rates shortly after.

  • EMIs on home loans rose significantly.

  • Borrowers across the country felt the impact directly.

Reverse Repo Rate → Controls the Floor of Rates 

The rate at which the RBI borrows money from commercial banks. When banks have surplus cash, they park it with the RBI at this rate.

Impact on Reverse Repo Rate when it goes UP:

Impact on Reverse Repo Rate when it goes DOWN:

Real-Life Example:

During COVID (2020), RBI slashed Reverse Repo Rate from 4.00% to 3.35% to push banks to stop "lazy banking" — i.e., parking money with RBI instead of lending it to businesses. Banks were nudged to lend more to MSMEs and individuals to revive the economy.

Note: Reverse Repo Rate does not change the Bank Rate directly. It sets the floor for market interest rates.

CRR (Cash Reserve Ratio) → Locks Bank Money, Raises Rates

Every bank must keep a fixed percentage of its total deposits as cash with the RBI. This money earns no interest and cannot be used for lending.

Impact on CRR when it goes UP:

More cash is locked with RBI → Banks have less money to lend

 Less credit supply → Demand for loans stays same but supply shrinks

Banks raise lending rates to protect profit margins

Effective cost of borrowing rises

Impact on CRR when it goes DOWN:

Banks free up more cash for lending

More credit in the market → Rates soften

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Summary

5

RBI uses both to manage liquidity and inflation.

4

Higher Reverse Repo = More funds parked with RBI.

3

Higher Repo = Costlier loans.

2

Reverse Repo Rate: Rate banks earn from RBI deposits.

1

Repo Rate: Rate at which banks borrow from RBI.

Quiz

Repo Rate is the rate at which:

A. Customers borrow from banks

B. Banks borrow from RBI

C. RBI borrows from banks

D. Companies borrow from banks

Quiz-Answer

Repo Rate is the rate at which:

A. Customers borrow from banks

B. Banks borrow from RBI

C. RBI borrows from banks

D. Companies borrow from banks

Fixed Income Portfolio Strategy - Impact of bank rates

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Fixed Income Portfolio Strategy - Impact of bank rates

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